29 research outputs found

    Event-based surveillance during EXPO Milan 2015. Rationale, tools, procedures, and initial results

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    More than 21 million participants attended EXPO Milan from May to October 2015, making it one of the largest protracted mass gathering events in Europe. Given the expected national and international population movement and health security issues associated with this event, Italy fully implemented, for the first time, an event-based surveillance (EBS) system focusing on naturally occurring infectious diseases and the monitoring of biological agents with potential for intentional release. The system started its pilot phase in March 2015 and was fully operational between April and November 2015. In order to set the specific objectives of the EBS system, and its complementary role to indicator-based surveillance, we defined a list of priority diseases and conditions. This list was designed on the basis of the probability and possible public health impact of infectious disease transmission, existing statutory surveillance systems in place, and any surveillance enhancements during the mass gathering event. This article reports the methodology used to design the EBS system for EXPO Milan and the results of 8 months of surveillance

    18 NOE Assignment With ARIA 2.0 The Nuts and Bolts

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    The assignment of nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) resonances is the crucial step in determining the three-dimensional structure of biomolecules from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data. Our program, Ambiguous Retraints for Iterative Assignment (ARIA), treats Noe assignment as an integral part of the structure determination process. This chapter briefly outlines the method and discusses how to carry out a complete structure determination project with the new version 2.0 of ARIA. Two new features greatly streamline the procedure: a new graphical user interface (GUI) and the incorporation of the data model of the Collaborative Computing Project for the NMR community (CCPN). The GUI supports the user in setting up and managing a project. The CCPN data model facilitates data exchange with a great variety of other programs. We give practical guidelines for how to use ARIA and how to analyze results

    NOE assignment with ARIA 2.0- the nuts and bolts Protein NMR Techniques, Second Edition

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    The interpretation of spectra from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) ex-periments is a complex data analysis problem. Despite great progress to-wards automation, some crucial analysis steps are still only amenable to semi-automatic or manual treatment. The primary observables for structur

    Structure of the histone mRNA hairpin required for cell cycle regulation of histone gene expression.

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    Expression of replication-dependent histone genes requires a conserved hairpin RNA element in the 3' untranslated regions of poly(A)-less histone mRNAs. The 3' hairpin element is recognized by the hairpin-binding protein or stem-loop-binding protein (HBP/SLBP). This protein-RNA interaction is important for the endonucleolytic cleavage generating the mature mRNA 3' end. The 3' hairpin and presumably HBP/SLBP are also required for nucleocytoplasmic transport, translation, and stability of histone mRNAs. RNA 3' processing and mRNA stability are both regulated during the cell cycle. Here, we have determined the three-dimensional structure of a 24-mer RNA comprising a mammalian histone RNA hairpin using heteronuclear multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. The hairpin adopts a novel UUUC tetraloop conformation that is stabilized by base stacking involving the first and third loop uridines and a closing U-A base pair, and by hydrogen bonding between the first and third uridines in the tetraloop. The HBP interaction of hairpin RNA variants was analyzed in band shift experiments. Particularly important interactions for HBP recognition are mediated by the closing U-A base pair and the first and third loop uridines, whose Watson-Crick functional groups are exposed towards the major groove of the RNA hairpin. The results obtained provide novel structural insight into the interaction of the histone 3' hairpin with HBP, and thus the regulation of histone mRNA metabolism
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